Displaying 1961 - 1980 of 4742
Death By A Thousand Haircuts: Economic Liberty and Occupational Licensure Reform
FTC Six-Month Accomplishments
Doctors Hospital at Renaissance/Mission Regional Medical Center
1707003 Informal Interpretation
1707002 Informal Interpretation
FTC Requires Baxter International and Claris Lifesciences to Divest 2 Types of Pharmaceutical Products as Condition of Baxter Acquiring Injectable Drugs Business from Claris
FTC Acting Chairman Ohlhausen Selects D. Bruce Hoffman as Acting Director of the Agency’s Bureau of Competition
FTC Staff Provides Additional Comment and Testimony in Tennessee Opposing Mountain States’ and Wellmont’s Certificate of Public Advantage Application
Tennessee Department of Health, Certificate of Public Advantage Hearing Testimony
Acting FTC Chairman Ohlhausen Appoints Neil Chilson as Acting Chief Technologist
Acting FTC Chairman Ohlhausen Announces Departure of Economics Bureau Director Ginger Zhe Jin, Appointment of Michael G. Vita as Acting Bureau Director
Wellmont Health System/Mountain States Health Alliance
1707001 Informal Interpretation
FTC Approves Sublicense for Synacthen Depot Submitted by Mallinckrodt ARD Inc.
FTC Approves Amendments to Divestiture Order in LafargeHolcim Ltd. Merger
DraftKings, Inc. / FanDuel Limited, In the Matter of
The FTC authorized legal action to block the merger of the two largest daily fantasy sports sites, DraftKings and FanDuel, alleging that the combined firm would control more than 90 percent of the U.S. market for paid daily fantasy sports contests. The FTC, jointly with the Offices of the Attorneys General in the State of California and the District of Columbia, filed a complaint in federal district court seeking a preliminary injunction to stop the deal and to maintain the status quo pending an administrative trial. The Commission also issued an administrative complaint alleging that the proposed merger violates Section 7 of the Clayton Act and Section 5 of the FTC Act by creating a single provider with by far the largest share of the market for paid daily fantasy sports contests in the United States.
On July 13, 2017, the parties abandoned the transaction, and the Commission dismissed the administrative complaint.
Mallinckrodt Ard Inc. (Questcor Pharmaceuticals)
Mallinckrodt ARD Inc., formerly known as Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc., and its parent company, Mallinckrodt plc, agreed to pay $100 million to settle charges that they violated the antitrust laws when Questcor acquired the rights to a drug that threatened its monopoly in the U.S. market for adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) drugs. Acthar is a specialty drug used as a treatment for infantile spasms, a rare seizure disorder afflicting infants, as well a drug of last resort used to treat other serious medical conditions. The complaint alleges that, while benefitting from an existing monopoly over the only U.S. ACTH drug, Acthar, Questcor illegally acquired the U.S. rights to develop a competing drug, Synacthen Depot. The acquisition stifled competition by preventing any other company from using the Synacthen assets to develop a synthetic ACTH drug, preserving Questcor’s monopoly and allowing it to maintain extremely high prices for Acthar. In addition to the $100 million monetary payment, the proposed stipulated court order, which must be approved by the federal court, requires that Questcor grant a license to develop Synacthen Depot to treat infantile spasms and nephrotic syndrome to a licensee approved by the Commission.
Displaying 1961 - 1980 of 4742